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New Hampshire · Kitchen · Free 2026 permit-fee estimator

Kitchen permit cost in New Hampshire

On a typical $35,000 kitchen project, New Hampshire's statewide median building permit fee is $490 — about 1.40% of cost. Top Manchester metros run higher.

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New Hampshire statewide median

$490

≈ 1.40% of $35,000 project cost

Range: $65 (min) – $1,200 (max)

Top 3 New Hampshire metros — actual permit fee

The state base × project type stays the same; the metro multiplier is where the swing comes from.

Manchester

$588

Metro multiplier: 1.2× statewide base

Nashua

$563

Metro multiplier: 1.15× statewide base

Concord

$490

Metro multiplier: statewide base

New Hampshire permit-fee context

Manchester + Nashua mid-tier; rural towns often flat-fee residential or no permit for owner-built outbuildings.

Why kitchen? Triggers building + plumbing + electrical + (sometimes) mechanical permits — 4 separate fee lines bundle to a higher total.

What this fee does NOT include

  • Plan-review service fees (typically 0.5–1% of cost, separate line)
  • Per-trade fees (plumbing, electrical, mechanical — $50–$200 each)
  • State-level surcharges (FL DBPR, NJ DCA, OR BCD, etc.)
  • Contractor's filing/processing fee

Rule of thumb: budget 1.5–2× the base permit fee for the all-in cost.

Compare kitchen remodel in New Hampshire across all lenses

Before you sign, run the 4 other state-aware lenses for the same project.

FAQ — Kitchen permits in New Hampshire

How much is a kitchen permit in New Hampshire in 2026?

On a typical $35,000 kitchen project in New Hampshire, the statewide median permit fee runs $490 — about 1.40% of project cost. Major metros run higher: Manchester $588, Nashua $563, Concord $490. Manchester + Nashua mid-tier; rural towns often flat-fee residential or no permit for owner-built outbuildings.

Why is the fee higher in major New Hampshire metros?

Each New Hampshire city/county sets its own multiplier on top of the state base rate. Manchester runs 1.2× because of stricter plan review + structural review + energy-code overhead. Concord sits lower (1×) because of less plan-review depth + simpler intake. Rural counties in New Hampshire often have flat-fee schedules below even the lowest metro.

What's included in the permit fee vs. what's billed separately?

The permit fee covers the building department's intake + base review. NOT included: plan-review service fees (often a separate line, 0.5–1% of project cost), per-trade fees for plumbing/electrical/mechanical (typically $50–$200 each), and any state-level surcharges (FL adds DBPR 1.5%, NJ adds DCA, OR adds 12% BCD surcharge). Your contractor's filing fee is also separate. Budget 1.5–2× the base permit fee for the all-in cost.

Can I skip the permit and save the fee?

Don't. Working without a required permit fails any future resale inspection (the buyer's inspector WILL flag it), voids your homeowner's insurance for any related claim, and triggers retro-permitting fines that are typically 2–3× the original fee. New Hampshire treats unpermitted kitchen work as a separate violation under state building code. The "savings" become a $1,500 problem at resale on a $500 fee.

Disclaimer: Permit fees are jurisdiction-specific and change frequently. These values are 2026 medians — verify against your local building department's current fee schedule before budgeting.

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